Apple was accused of teaming up with HarperCollins, Simon & Schuster, and Hachette Book Group to bar Amazon from selling e-books at a discount by keeping their prices artificially high. But because of today's settlement, the shady partnership is over, and Amazon can go back to peddling e-books at $9.99 or lower.

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Apple will still have to go to court next spring to answer to anti-trust allegations, as will two other publishers that didn't settle—Penguin and Macmillan. A couple of camps might not be so thrilled about the settlement, however. It could cause a bit of a pricing debacle for traditional book stores, because book books will never be as cheap as e-books. The other is Amazon competitors. In 2010, the last time Amazon was able to sell e-books for $9.99, it had a stranglehold on 90 percent of the market, and other retailers struggled to make inroads. Now they fear they're going to be in the same boat all over again.

But bookophiles rejoice, you're about to get more bang for your bookbuck. [WSJ via iJailbreak]